- Galveston Independent School District
Infobox School
name = Galveston Independent School District
established = 1881 by the City of Galveston, 1949 as an Independent School District
type = Public
affiliation =
grades = Pre-K3 - 12
president =
head of school =
dean =
faculty =
staff =
students = 7903 [ [http://mansfield.tea.state.tx.us/TEA.AskTED.Web/Forms/Home.aspx AskTED Home ] ]
enrollment =
location = 3904 Avenue TGalveston, TX
coordinates =
country = USA
homepage = [http://www.gisd.org Galveston Independent School District]Galveston Independent School District is a
school district based in Galveston,Texas (USA).Catchment area
Galveston ISD takes students from the cities of Galveston and Jamaica Beach. Galveston ISD also serves unincorporated areas of Galveston County, including the communities of Port Bolivar and Crystal Beach on the Bolivar Peninsula.
Each Galveston ISD house or residential area is assigned to an elementary school and a middle school. In Port Bolivar, the houses and residential areas are zoned to a K-8 center. All high school students in Galveston ISD attend
Ball High School .Galveston College serves the catchment area of Galveston ISD.History
In 1881, the citizens of Galveston, authorized by the legislative act of 1879 which specified that all cities of a certain size could initiate and maintain their own school system, organized a public
school district and elected a board of trustees. Some 20 teachers were employed to teach students in grades one through seven. Prior to this time, all education in Galveston was private or parochial.In the summer of 1883, a local dry goods businessman, George Ball, offered to finance construction of new schools. Ball's offer was accepted, and the cornerstone for what would become
Ball High School was laid onFebruary 15 ,1884 . Ball died onMarch 11 ,1884 without seeing his gift completed. Ball High School opened its doors to 200 pupils onOctober 1 ,1884 , with a building consisting of 12 classrooms, two offices and an auditorium. According to Gary Cartwright's "Galveston, A History of the Island", two alderman pressured the school board to open the new school to all races. At first, the school board agreed to do that, but changed its mind when Ball's heirs offered to give another $10,000, if the high school was only for white students. Susan Wiley Hardwick's "Mythic Galvston: Reinventing America'a Third Coast" documents that Central High School was opened as a high school for black students in a storefront in 1885. Central High and Ball High merged into one high school in 1968.Public schools in Galveston were operated by the city until 1949, when Galveston ISD was established by the Texas legislature [ [http://www.texasexplorer.net/GalvestonISD.html Texas Explorer] ] .
In the 2000s skyrocketing home prices created by the completion of many high-rise projects [ [http://www.statesman.com/business/content/business/stories/realestate/07/22coastal.html Austin American Statesman] ] have forced many middle class Galveston residents to move off of the island to many cities, including
Texas City , League City, and La Marque. Galveston ISD's tax base grew by 13% in 2005 [ [http://news.galvestondailynews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=cecba57d52dda271 Galveston County Daily News] ] . Including all students, GISD lost 8% of its students (780) between the 2002-2003 school year and the 2006-2007 school year, with a 7% loss (610) in 2006 [ [http://blogs.galvnews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=aacab3c3ce24f0d1 Galveston County Daily News] .] The district lost 12% of its students during the same years whenHurricane Katrina evacuees and out-of-district students are excluded [ [http://news.galvestondailynews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=cecba57d52dda271 Galveston County Daily News] ] .Galveston ISD lost students to mainland school districts such as
Clear Creek ISD andDickinson ISD [ [http://news.galvestondailynews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=cecba57d52dda271 Galveston County Daily News] ] . District enrollment fell by 101 students from 2004-2005 to 2005-2006. The district missed 772 students on October 30, 2006. Elementary school enrollment had dropped about 2.3 percent from the 1996-1997 school year to the 2006-2007 school year. If the trend continues for fall 2007, the district would lose 300 students to the newly-opened Ambassadors Preparatory School, a charter school, in addition to 94 students [ [http://news.galvestondailynews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=132f17fded3732a4 Galveston County Daily News] ] , translating to a loss of 10.6% of the district's total elementary school students. At the end of 2006, GISD's total enrollment was about 8,700. [ [http://blogs.galvnews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=aacab3c3ce24f0d1 Galveston County Daily News] ]On January 2, 2007, the Galveston County Daily News published a report about parents frustrated over plans to close Scott Elementary School [ [http://news.galvestondailynews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=33b7e25fb36c46ee&-session=TheDailyNews:D83E9DBA04fb727BAEWos27A6CA9 Galveston County Daily News] ] . On
May 15 ,2007 , the "Houston Chronicle " reported that theLeague of United Latin American Citizens , in an attempt to prevent schools from closing, filed a complaint with the U.S. federal government asserting that GISD violated a desegregation order. [ [http://www.chron.com/CDA/archives/archive.mpl?id=2007_4345932 "Filing disputes school closings in Galveston,"] "Houston Chronicle ", May 15, 2007] ] Pat Guseman, an official with Pasa Demographics, predicted that GISD would lose about 1,468 students in the five years after 2007. [ [http://blogs.galvnews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=aacab3c3ce24f0d1 Galveston County Daily News] ] Guseman, characterizing the change in Galveston demographics as "Hamptonization," stated that economically disadvantaged children andHispanic children are increasing, whileAfrican-American children are decreasing, as of 2007. Guseman cited increasing private school enrollment, increasing costs of housing, and a dearth of local employment as reasons for the loss of students in Galveston. [ [http://blogs.galvnews.com/story.lasso?ewcd=aacab3c3ce24f0d1 Galveston County Daily News] ]chool configuration change plans
In March 2007, Galveston ISD announced that it would introduce plans to change the configurations of its elementary and middle schools within the city of Galveston. [ [https://www.edline.net/pages/Galveston_ISD/Word_on_the_Street Galveston ISD] ]
Ending in the 2007-2008 school year, Galveston ISD operates:
*Six elementary schools including grades Pre-Kindergarten through 5
*One schools including grades Pre-Kindergarten through 8
*Three middle schools with grades 6 through 8
*One high school with grades 9 through 12After spring 2008, Alamo Elementary School would be converted into a multi-purpose center.
Starting in the 2008-2009 school year, Galveston ISD would operate four PreK-4 elementary school and two K-4 elementary schools.
Weis Middle School would become a 5-6 school. Central Middle School would become a 7-8 school. Austin Middle School would become a
magnet school for grades 5-8.Now GISD is configured in-
*4 Pre-K through 4th grade elementary schools.
*2 K through 4th grade elementary schools.
*1 5th grade through 6th grade middle school.
*1 7th grade through 8th grade middle school.
*1 5h grade through 8th grade magnet school.
*1 9th grade through 12th grade high school.GISD Police
Galveston ISD Police Department is a school district police department established under the provision of theTexas Education Code . The department was established during the 1967-68 school year to assist during the consolidation of Central High School (anAfrican American school) into the all CaucasianBall High School to bring an end to segregation of schools in Galveston ISD.Dress codes
All elementary and middle school students residing in Galveston Island are required to wear
school uniform s. Crenshaw School students are not required to wear school uniforms.Ball High School has a detailed dress code requiring solid-colored
polo shirt s,turtleneck s, solid-colored trousers, and blue denim jeans. [ [https://www.edline.net/pages/Galveston_ISD/Group_Page_Design/gisd/GISD%20Dress%20Code%20June%202007.pdf Galveston ISD] ]Students in Galveston Academy, the alternative school, are required to wear uniforms.
GISD TV
Galveston ISD has its own TV channel available on Comcast Cable channel 17. The channel includes current information about the school district including recent news in short video clips;
school board meetings are also shown.List of schools
econdary schools
High schools
*
Ball High School (Galveston)Middle schools
Comprehensive
* 7-8: Central Middle School (Galveston, constructed 1954 [https://www.edline.net/files/7e730ce32b30a3c23745a49013852ec4/Central_Middle_School.pub] )
* 5-6: [http://www.gisd.org/weisms/site/default.asp Weis Middle School] (Galveston, constructed 1965 [https://www.edline.net/files/198d859ec4309cd83745a49013852ec4/Weis_Middle_School.pub] )Magnet
* [http://www.gisd.org/austinmag/site/default.asp Austin Middle School] (Galveston) (In Winter 2006, Austin MS was temporarily housed [https://www.edline.net/files/b954b4afcdbfc5713745a49013852ec4/Austin_Middle_School.pub] ) (5-8)K-8 schools
* [http://www.gisd.org/crenshaw/site/default.asp Crenshaw Elementary and Middle School] (Unincorporated Galveston County - Port Bolivar address, Constructed 2005 [https://www.edline.net/files/9f07529ac11328e23745a49013852ec4/Crenshaw_School.pub] ) (formerly Bolivar School)
** The current Crenshaw campus is constructed onstilts [https://www.edline.net/files/9f07529ac11328e23745a49013852ec4/Crenshaw_School.pub] .Primary schools
All of the following schools are in Galveston.
* Burnet Elementary School (PK-4)
* [http://www.gisd.org/morganele/site/default.asp L.A. Morgan Elementary School] (PK-4)
* [http://www.gisd.org/oppeele/site/default.asp Greta Oppe Elementary School] (PK4-4)
* [http://www.gisd.org/parkerele/site/default.asp Gladnieo Parker Elementary School] (PK4-4)
* [http://www.gisd.org/rosenele/site/default.asp Henry Rosenberg Elementary School] (PK-4)
* [http://www.gisd.org/scottele/site/default.asp Charles B. Scott Elementary School] (PK4-4)Former schools
Former secondary schools
Former high schools
* Central High School (Galveston) (First
African-American segregated high school in Texas, now holds Central Middle School [https://www.edline.net/files/7e730ce32b30a3c23745a49013852ec4/Central_Middle_School.pub] )
* Ball High North (Galveston) (Now Scott Elementary, housed 9th and 10th grades and Ball High (called Ball South) housed 11th and 12th grades)Former middle schools
* Sam Houston Junior High School (Galveston)
* Lovenberg Junior High School (Galveston) demolished - date neededFormer elementary schools
* [https://www.edline.net/pages/Alamo_ES Alamo Elementary School] (closed 2007) The building is currently used as storage and for the district alternative education program for students with discipline problems.
* Davy Crockett Elementary School
* San Jacinto Elementary School (closed 2006) (Students attending San Jacinto were reassigned to various schools - the San Jacinto attendance boundary now belongs to Rosenberg ES)
* William B. Travis Elementary School - Sold and converted to apartmentsee also
*
List of school districts in Texas External links
* [http://www.gisd.org Galveston Independent School District]
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20040512003633/gisd.org/schools/boundaries.html Galveston ISD attendance boundaries] (Reflecting prior to Fall 2006)References
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